Ramez Naam biography

Ramez Naam

Ramez Naam Biography

Ramez Naam was born in Cairo, Egypt, and came to the US at the age of 3. He's a computer scientist, futurist, and an award-winning author.

He helped develop two of the most widely used pieces of software in the world: Microsoft Internet Explorer and Microsoft Outlook. Since 2002 he has served as a member of the advisory board of the Nano Business Alliance, and is a member of the
World Future Society, The Extropy Institute, and the World
Transhumanist Association. He holds 19 patents related to search
engines, information retrieval, web browsing, artificial
intelligence, and machine learning. Naam has spoken at dozens of
conferences on biotechnology.

He has written a few science
fiction and non-fiction books. His works include The Infinite
Resource: The Power of Ideas on a Finite Planet,
Nexus, Crux, More Than Human: Embracing the
Promise of Biological Enhancement and Apex.
Nexus won the 2014 Prometheus Award. He was nominated for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 2014.

A resident of Seattle, he currently works on Internet search technology at Microsoft.

This bio was last updated on 08/08/2015. We try to keep BookBrowse's biographies both up to date and accurate, but with many thousands of lives to keep track of it's a tough task. So, please help us - if the information about this author is out of date or inaccurate, and you know of a more complete source, please let us know. Authors and publishers: If you wish to make changes to a bio, send the complete biography as you would like it displayed so that we can replace the old with the new.

Interview

Find out why Ramez Naam believes that we should embrace, not fear, the biological enhancements that are increasingly available to us through the use of modern technologies such as gene therapy.

What gave you the idea to write More Than Human?I've always been both a fascinated observer of science  the
kind actually practiced in labs around the world, and an avid reader of science
fiction. In 1999, a good friend of mine who I'd loaned a science fiction novel
to commented that he expected that in 10 years we'd be walking around with
electrodes in our heads, fully immersed in a William Gibson-style cyberspace. I
scoffed at the idea, knowing that the brain is an incredibly complex organ and
doubting that researchers would get us anywhere near the level of understanding
of the brain necessary for that sort of thing until 50 or 100 years from now.

Later that year, a team at Duke University published a paper in
the journal Science  one of the top two scientific journals in the world 
where they'd wired electrodes into the brain of a living rat and given it
control over a robot arm. And in the same year, a researcher in Atlanta
implanted electrodes in the brain of a man named Johnny Ray, a patient who'd
been paralyzed from the neck down by a stroke, and gave him the power to control
a computer just by thinking about it.

Readalikes

All the books below are recommended as readalikes for Ramez Naam but some maybe more relevant to you than others depending on which books by the author you have read and enjoyed. So look for the suggested read-alikes by title linked on the right.
How we choose readalikes

Harry Bruinius is the author of Better for All the World: The Secret History of Forced Sterilization and Americas Quest for Racial Purity. He was
born in Chicago and attended Yale University, where he studied ...
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